Sunday, 8 January 2017

‘A Dark Beauty’ - Harry Clarke's Controversial Window.

The windows of Harry Clarke are like jewels, strung out across Ireland.

Long after visiting, their glowing colours,

eloquent faces

and subtle detail remain in the memory.

The artist, Henry Patrick Clarke, was born in 1889 in Dublin, where his father owned a decorating firm,
Joshua Clarke & Sons.

The business later grew to include a stained glass workshop in which Harry became an apprentice whilst continuing his education at evening classes in the Metropolitan College of Art and Design.

Aged 25, Clarke married the artist, Margaret Crilley, and later, with his young family, spent time in London working as a book illustrator.

Clarke’s first commission was to illustrate the Little Mermaid

by Hans Christian Anderson.

After the death of his father they returned to Dublin in 1921 when Harry and his brother, Walter, took over the business.

Clarke was later diagnosed as suffering from tuberculosis which was exacerbated by the use of chemicals and lead in his stained-glass work. Despite poor health Harry created over 150 windows, many on religious themes.

However, it is his darker, secular windows with their astonishing blues, passionate reds and fanciful characters which really captivate me.

The glorious 'Eve of St. Agnes' window at the Hugh Lane Gallery, Dublin.

Details from 'The Eve of St. Agnes'.

In 1926, at the peak of his career, Harry Clarke was commissioned by the Irish Free State Government to create a masterpiece. His instructions were to make a window for the International Labour Building in the League of Nations, Geneva, which would be a gift from the Free State to promote Irish cultural identity internationally.

Harry’s vision was to combine words and images to illustrate the work of fifteen modern Irish writers. Of those to be included some were members of the Gaelic League, others were associated with the Abbey Theatre, some were ‘disgraced’ writers and several were Protestant.

A year later was he given permission to proceed with his design on the condition that he first present sketches to the Minister for Industry and Commerce, Patrick McGilligan.

The top tier of the window is dominated by two female saints.

St. Brigid, from Lady Gregory’s play ‘The Story brought by Brigit’,

is surrounded by the flora & fauna of Kildare.

Joan of Arc, from George Bernard Shaw’s 'Saint Joan',

stands in full armour against a backdrop of the Wicklow Mountains.

Clarke’s work on the Geneva window was interrupted by other commissions and by his increasing ill health.
With advancing tuberculosis in both lungs he was admitted to a Swiss sanatorium in 1929 and was forced to entrust the final stages of the window to his studio artists.

The most controversial section, from Liam O’Flaherty’s novel, 'Mr. Gilhooley',

shows the anti-hero drunkenly leering at his young mistress Nelly

whilst she dances in gossamer veils.

To the right recline Deirdre & her lover Naisi from AE’s play.

By this time Harry’s health had deteriorated again, forcing him back to the sanatorium where he received letters updating him about his creation. He was also awaiting payment for the Geneva window commission.

A scene of mourning, taken from Padraic Colum’s poem 'Cradle Song'.

A young mother embraces her dead infant whilst the Virgin and Child appear above

& men come in from the fields to pay their respects.

In George Fitzmaurice’s play, 'The Magic Glasses',

Jaymony obtains a set of magic glasses that allow him to escape into

a world of fantasy where all desires come true.

On 6th January 1931, fearing that he would die abroad, Clarke began the journey home to Ireland.
Hours later, aged 41, Harry Clarke died in Switzerland. He never discovered the fate of his window.

The last panel depicts Seamus O’Kelly’s 'The Weaver’s Grave',

where a widow & a young gravedigger exchange glances between the tombstones.

Finally, a minstrel from Joyce’s poem, 'Chamber Music', stands on a river bank surrounded by a lush landscape.

After his death Harry’s widow finally received payment. She was told by the government that they had decided against presenting the Geneva window to the League of Nations, instead it would remain in the buildings on Merrion Square.

Margaret Clarke did not want Harry’s masterpiece to be hidden from public view and she bought the window back from the State two years later, paying the full price of £450.

The Geneva window was finally displayed in front room of the Harry Clarke Studios, in the Hugh Lane Gallery and in the Fine Art Society in London. One journalist wrote:

“ This was the last piece of work Harry Clarke ever did before illness took him away forever.

In it he is at his most imaginative and the glory of colour, which was his chief gift,

is a strange blend of dark beauty and almost spectral luminosity. ”

In 1988 Harry’s sons, David and Michael, sold the Geneva Window to Mitchell Wolfson

What an amazing artist and such a story. You nearly couldn't write it. Dark genius being courted by church and state but the beauty of his creation was just to much for an unenlightened time. Thanks for another wonderful post Jane